The provided infographics provides a general look at the religious landscape in Central and Eastern Europe. It’s interesting to note that exotic sects, new-age-style beliefs and other “neo-liberal” constructs especially actively challenge traditional religious systems in the states that had purportedly sold parts or all of its sovereignity to the Euro-Atlantic elites. This can be seen by especially high % of supporters of ‘other’ religions in states like Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Romania and Ukraine.
The case of Ukraine is also interesting because this predominantly-Orthodox country is now turned into a hotbed of various radicals, organized crime networks, sects and sectarian-style believes. The Kiev government and its Western backers are contributing efforts against the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church through various non-canonical entities.
Czech Republic is nice. 3/4 of population atheists. Soviet communists were weak in Russia and Belarus.
I was going to slam you for your remark, but you are right. Who would have thought it ?.
https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/religion-in-the-czech-republic.html
but we are more and more unaffiliated than atheists, less and less space for psychopatic/pedophile religions :)
What about the Jews? They make a lot of noise and seem to be unrepresented :)
https://www.jewishpress.com/wp-content/uploads/Israeli-shekel-at-a-seven-year-high-against-the-US-dollar-Flash-90.jpg
among them is the greatest number of homosexuals, pedophiles and psychopaths = the reason they are so loud :)
Like Ukraine-like Serbia, like Serbia-like Bosnia.
In Serbia Orthodox church is in crisis, like wise Official Muslim community in Bosnia is in danger of disappearance.
Dear Silly Front, Armenia is not Orthodox :)
Greetings, the Armenian Apostolic Church is a aprt of Oriental Orthodoxy. The infographics provides a general picture. It does not divide Orthodox communions; Shia and Sunni Islam; as well as does not provide a detailed look at various believes in “others”.
Sincerely yours,
SF Team
Thanks for the reply.
“Despite the similar name, they are therefore a different branch of Christianity from the Eastern Orthodox.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oriental_Orthodoxy_by_country
Not making a difference between Protestants, Jews and anything else makes no sense.
But I understand the “info-graph” did not worth the time since you had to put all your creativity in this brilliant piece:
“The case of Ukraine is also interesting because this predominantly-Orthodox country is now turned into a hotbed of various radicals, organized crime networks, sects and sectarian-style believes.”